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“If you rush into a new relationship, others usually interpret it as you are not ready or that you are overly eager or that you haven’t searched long enough for a new partner,” said Wolfinger, who teaches University courses on the family, divorce and remarriage. He was motivated to research the rebound marriage issues by his students, who consistently asked if second (and subsequent) marriages were more likely to end in divorce if the parties marry too soon. “There were no good studies out there that allowed me to answer this question,” said Wolfinger, who also an adjunct associate professor in the University’s Department of Sociology. The research analyzed 1,171 adults from the National Survey of Families and Households data to determine whether the rebound time (the months elapsed between an initial divorce and subsequent remarriage) affected the stability of a remarriage. Wolfinger measured the end of the first marriage by separation, not divorce, because he said that research suggests that marriage often ends when separation occurs. The new relationship formation was measured from the time the person remarried or started living with someone who then became their spouse. The same factors that put first marriages at risk, however – lower levels of education and coming from a divorced family – also challenge second marriages, said Wolfinger. “Second marriages have a number of additional factors working against them – the difficulties stepkids represent as well as the fact that the second marriage is a population that has shown its willingness to get divorced. They have done it once and, in essence, they are willing to do it again,” he said. Many of the disruptions associated with divorce, such as residential mobility, take place within a year or two. But Wolfinger found that much of the clinical literature on divorce, was “vague” in how long emotional recovery takes. “It is safer to say different people recover at different rates," he said. |
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Newsflash! You're getting a divorce! IT’S a common concern. How do you keep the rumors about your separation and/or divorce from getting out of hand and causing further damage to you, your spouse, and your children? Short of hiring your very own spin doctor, there are several steps you can take to keep the buzz about your news to a dull roar.
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| There's always hope IF you have teenagers, a small but special book can help you understand how they are feeling. There's Always Hope is a 50-page paperback book by Dr. Terrie L. Sizemore, RN, RVM, that's told from the perspective of "Hope," a child of divorce. The book is based on actual events that the author, a pediatric nurse, shared with a child over a 10-year period. She wrote the book not only to offer hope and strength to young readers but also to give parents, teachers, and counselors a "closer and sensitive look at the children who experience divorce." The story opens with Hope at five years old and continues through her childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood. With the help of her family – and a special friend named Kate – Hope recovers from the upset of her parents' divorce to succeed in her young life. |
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